What is the difference between OpenOffice and LibreOffice? I understand that LibreOffice is another fork that is going to be developed. I have used OpenOffice since v1 and am wondering if there is a definite advantage to uninstalling and trying LibreOffice.

5 Answers
5

As of now there is hardly any changes between LibreOffice and OpenOffice. The former is a fork to free OpenOffice.org from the clutches of Oracle.

Till date Sun has asked for copyright assignment to Sun if you wanted your patch to be merged. This has been a great deterrent and has limited community involvement.
LibreOffice says "Everyone is invited". It is not an office suit which will be controlled by one organization, but many organizations will take part to develop it. The supporters include Google, RedHat, Canonical, Novell and a few more (not sure about the list)

From that page I can see that the codebase is a bit messy. There are non-English comments, bogus comments, dead code and what not.

Another good reason for breaking apart was that Oracle does not look interested in taking the development of Open Source ahead. OpenSolaris is nearly gone and if this fork didn't happen, probably OO.o would also have become stagnant.

Oracle bought Sun in 2010 and commercial development of OpenOffice.org was officially terminated shortly thereafter. Then some dedicated members of the OpenOffice.org community pooled their resources and set up The Document Foundation to provide structure and leadership for the continued development of the open source code used by OpenOffice.org. The new product was named Libre Office. Most of the original OpenOffice.org community support is now behind Libre Office.

OpenOffice.org is now part of the Apache incubator project, but it still does have some licensing issues with Oracle.

Libreoffice is a dedicated fork which aims to be free of Oracle's clutches. LibreOffice beta is mostly similar to OpenOffice "as of now", with just a few UI and branding changes, because they are based on the same source. You can expect big changes in the future as the paths are divergent. As for installing it, I'd say you can try LibreOffice without any apprehensions, though I personally recommend you to wait for a Final, stable release for pure goodness. For more details, you can go through the FAQ here. Please excuse me for the mistakes, if any. :)

It's been a couple of months now since this question was asked but I wanted to stress how important it is to get as many contributors doing QA, ie. testing and using LibreOffice everyday and reporting any bugs and problems they may be facing.

Getting on board early also lets you contribute in another way than coding - there are also documentation and translation efforts that can benefit from such early contributions.